Image of the Day: Birds of a Feather

Despite containing similar chemical pigments, red and yellow parrot feathers display distinct hues.

Sukanya Charuchandra
| 1 min read

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ABOVE: A parrot feather
JONATHAN BARNSLEY, UNIVERSITY OF OTAGO, NEW ZEALAND

The red and yellow feathers of parrots aren’t really that different at the chemical level, despite their unmistakable hues. A study published in Royal Society Open Science on July 4 finds that the feathers’ chromophores, which are the light-absorbing portion of pigments, associate with each other to giving rise to red plumage. Without such interactions, chromophores give feathers their yellow appearance.

“Chromophore diversity can come about when molecules interact or communicate with their nearest neighbours to change how one another absorbs light,” coauthor Jonathan Barnsley, a doctoral student at the University of Otago in New Zealand, says in a statement.

J.E. Barnsley et al., “Frequency dispersion reveals chromophore diversity and colour-tuning mechanism in parrot feathers,” Roy Soc Open Sci, doi:10.1098/rsos.172010, 2018.

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Meet the Author

  • Sukanya Charuchandra

    Sukanya Charuchandra

    Originally from Mumbai, Sukanya Charuchandra is a freelance science writer based out of wherever her travels take her. She holds master’s degrees in Science Journalism and Biotechnology. You can read her work at sukanyacharuchandra.com.

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